Richt Quiet on End of Game

AUBURN – Georgia head coach Mark Richt didn't want to say much about the chipiness near the end of Saturday's game with Auburn

It caused Richt to march to midfield and prevent his team from rushing the field.

The contretemps was the reason Richt elected to take a knee at the end of the game, rather than run a few plays, down 49-31.

"I wanted all of our guys to be available for the Georgia Tech game," Richt said. "When things get that hot and that emotional, I thought that was the wise thing to do. I didn't want anything that would embarrass Georgia, or embarrass the Bulldog nation, or our university."

Richt then clammed up when asked what he felt led to the fighting.

"You know what, I prefer not to say. OK? Because I just don't think anything good would come of it," Richt said.

Then Richt was asked if it was fair to say it was related to the hits Auburn's Nick Fairley made on Aaron Murray, one of which was flagged for a 15-yard penalty.

"People were smack-talking. Pushing and shoving," King said. "If you pretty much watch the tape, it'd probably be 30 personal fouls you could've called on both teams. It was towards the end of the game, so I guess it let loose a little more."

Murray injury not serious

Murray had to helped off the field late in the game after taking a hit to the knee. Richt said there didn't appear to be any structural damage, and it was only "a blow" to the knee bone.

Murray did not appear to be limping as he walked off the field after the game.

"He actually wanted to go back in and play. He was up and able to," Richt said. "But I just told him get your rear end out of there."

"I thought for me personally he wasn't anything special," Houston said. "He didn't do anything special to us tonight. We just had some blown assignments and they capitalized on our blown assignments, what's been going on all season."

"That's a player. I haven't seen a quarterback (like) that since Vince Young," Green said. "He's a great quarterback, and just a great player."

Second-guessing

Richt played it safe on two key game-management decisions.

Late in the first half, Georgia took over at its own 21 with 51 seconds, after Auburn tied it at 21. Given the nature of the game, and Auburn's struggling defense, the Bulldogs might have tried to pass downfield.

Richt said his decision depended on the kick return. He told offensive coordinator Mike Bobo that if they returned it past the 30 they would go into the one-minute drill.

"They had grabbed momentum back," Richt said. "And I wasn't really interested in getting it where they got another score before the end of the half."

But Richt said he didn't really think about going for it at the end of the third quarter, rather than kicking a field goal that made it 35-31.

"It did cross my mind," Richt said of going for it. "I felt like by putting points on the board, we still were putting enough pressure on them that we had to continue to score. And they did."

A record, but little solace

Brandon Boykin set Georgia's career record for kick return yards, breaking the mark held the past 24 years by Gene Washington. But Boykin wasn't crowing afterwards, especially since the return team was bottled up all game. The junior averaged 15 yards a return.

"I don't even think I got past the 30 on any return," Boykin said. "We've gotta go back and see what happened. But that's about the worse we've done all season."